When you enter the political arena, as Campbell has done here, it's dishonest to pretend you're not a participant.

Now, fast-forward 2 weeks from this Twitter exchange -- during which time there was an attempted assassination of about two dozen Republican Congressman as they practiced for an annual charity baseball game. The only reasons the Congressmen survived are modern medicine, two armed Capitol Police officers, and the shooter was an awful shot.

During this two-week period, the News & Observer did exactly zero stories on whether Democrats and their affiliated groups on the political Left might need to do some self-examination. There were no stories about whether Democrats may have helped incite the attempted murders by their use of over-the-top rhetoric and demagoguery.

Nobody on the Left was asked to condemn hyperbolic exaggerations and hate-filled speech.

Instead, the first speech policing effort was directed at Sen. Dan Bishop over his "jihad media" term.

Questioned about his use of the term “jihad” – typically associated with terrorism by Islamic extremists – Bishop defended the comment in additional tweets.

“How can I ‘disagree’ with a ‘news’ story?” Bishop wrote. “Isn’t it supposed to be facts? Or is it a jihad: ‘any vigorous, emotional crusade’?”

He continued his defense of the comment Thursday morning: “What is the right term for media so partisan their support for free speech is selective?”

This N&O article also included a comment from the NC Senate Leader Phil Berger's office:

“While Sen. Berger wouldn’t have used those words, he certainly understands Sen. Bishop’s frustration with the overt liberal bias of some of the state’s reporters,” Berger spokeswoman Shelly Carver said in an email. “It would probably be helpful for all sides to tone down the over-the-top rhetoric against those involved in various forms of public service, including so-called religious leaders using incendiary terms like ‘all-white extremists,’ ‘hijackers,’ and ‘criminals’ to describe public officials. We have not seen the media hold those people to account."

This is the standard to which the NC Capitol Press Corps adheres: If a Republican says something, then Republicans must be asked to condemn, condone, disavow, or support it.

This is the same standard by which Republicans are held nationally, as well.

I am fine with this standard - if it's applied to Democrats, too.

But it's not - as we saw in the aftermath of the Conrgressional assassination attempt.

Rev. William Barber - a now-national figure in the Democratic Party - has a long history of inflammatory, divisive, and hyperbolic rhetoric.

Barber spoke at the Democratic National Convention in November.

Barber was the de facto head of the NC Democratic Party during the early part of this decade, using his Moral Monday protests to organize a party that had been wrecked by scandal, electoral defeats, and fiscal calamity.

Barber, the state chairman of the NC NAACP, is a leader within the state Democratic Party.